People
act as though Judaism is just
another religion like
Christianity or Islam. It's
not. It's a creed of
domination and racial
superiority. | The
Independent London, Wednesday, April 23,
2003 Reform
Club moves to expel friend of Holocaust
denier By Ian Burrell Media and Culture Correspondent A former fashion model
who married into aristocracy is facing
expulsion from one of Britain's most
historic private clubs over accusations of
anti-Semitism. Lady Renouf of Kensington, the
former wife of the late New Zealand
financier Sir Frank "The Bank" Renouf, has
been described as "unfit" to be a member
of the Reform Club, in Pall Mall in
London. The Reform was established 160 years
ago as a bastion of liberal and
progressive thought. Past members have
included the writers Henry James, H G
Wells, E M Forster and Sir Arthur
Conan Doyle. But not all literary figures are
welcome. Lady Renouf's decision to invite
to the club David Irving, the
historian who was denounced
by a High Court judge in 2000 as a racist,
an anti-Semite and a falsifier of history,
had already caused outrage among many
fellow Reform members. Lady Renouf, who is in her fifties, has
maintained that Irving has a right to
freedom of speech. But an article
published in The Independent on
Sunday this month, highlighting her
presence at an American conference of
extreme right-wingers, may mean she has
finally to bid farewell to the Reform. The
article, written by Johann Hari,
recounted his meetings with Lady Renouf at
the Irvine Marriott Hotel in Orange
County, California, where the conference
took place last summer. She told Hari: "People act as though Judaism
is just another religion like
Christianity or Islam. It's not. It's a
creed of domination and racial
superiority." She said she was "firm friends" with
Irving and had for two and a half months
attended every day of the court case where
the historian sued
the American academic Deborah
Lipstadt, after she denounced him as a
"Holocaust denier". Irving spectacularly
lost the case and was landed with costs of
about £2m. When Lady Renouf said goodbye to Hari
in the hotel lobby she told him: "It's so good to see that so
many young people are getting involved
in our movement and seeing the truth
about the Jews." .
THE Reform Club has a reputation for
tolerance. But this was seen as a step too
far and signatures were collected for a
requisition for expulsion. Lady
Renouf grew up in Australia as Michele
Mainwaring and she was crowned Miss
Newcastle, New South Wales, in 1968. Her
current interests include acting and
studying "the psychology of religion".
When she met Sir Frank she told him she
was "Countess Griaznoff", the ex-wife of a
Russian nobleman. They quickly married, in 1991, when the
financier was 72 and she was 44. She
stated on her marriage certificate that
her father was dead. But during their six-week honeymoon in
Australia, Sir Frank learnt that he did
have a father-in-law after all -- a New
South Wales truck driver called Arthur.
Michele and Sir Frank got divorced. But
Michele kept her title. With her looks, her name and her quirky
academic interests, Lady Renouf became a
prominent figure on London's intellectual
party circuit. But her world could unravel
next month when the Reform Club's general
committee meets to consider her
expulsion. © 2003
Independent Digital (UK)
LtdRelated
items on this website: -
The
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the old buffers
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Protests
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Reform
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The
model turned society queen, a tarnished
Holocaust historian and a disturbingly
unsavoury anti-Semitic
email
-
The
Times calls Mr Irving: An unreformed
character (ho ho).
-
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